Click the star to add/remove an item to/from your individual schedule.
You need to be logged in to avail of this functionality.

Accepted Paper:

Towards Socio-Gerontechnology: modelling the theoretical intersection of STS and gerontology  
Alexander Peine (Open University of The Netherlands) Louis Neven (Avans University of Applied Sciences)

Paper short abstract:

This paper investigates the theoretical gains which can be made by combining conceptual and theoretical insights from Science and Techology Studies and social gerontology. It provides a model that allows a deeper and theoretically more refined understanding of the ageing-technology nexus.

Paper long abstract:

This paper investigates the theoretical gains that can be made by combining insights from STS and social gerontology. Although ageing is globally recognized as a societal challenge and investments in technologies to deal with this challenge are high, current gerontechnologies mostly fail to live up to expectations. Partly this is due to the poor connection between social scientific understanding of ageing and the technically focused discipline of gerontechnology. Our paper presents a theoretical model in which the relationship between designers and users is modelled as reciprocal and evolving over time. The connection between design and use is made via the script concept whereas the connection between use and design is made via the user representation concept (both from actor-network theory). Acceptance is seen as dependent on technological literacy, technology generations, perceived stigmatisation, perceived benefit and domesticability of a technology. Older users are, in turn, seen as potentially active actors who are both enabled and constrained by gerontechnologies. The evolution of the connection between older user and the technology can subsequently be followed over time, which allows for conceptualizing the life course as a user-technology hybrid. This model sensitises us to the stereotypical imagery of ageing that underlies many gerontechnological designs, to the constraining and enabling effects of age scripts that are the result of such user representations and to the ability of older people to act as active technology users who change and circumvent such scripts. It thus allows a deeper and theoretically more refined understanding of the ageing-technology nexus.

Panel T099
New frontiers in social gerontechnology - Exploring Challenges at the Intersection of STS and Ageing Studies
  Session 1 Friday 2 September, 2016, -